Poem of the day
Categories
Poetry Hubs
Explore
You can also search poems by theme, metrics, form
and more.
Poems
Poets
Page 301 of 525
Previous
Next
The Phantom
'Upstairs in the large closet, child, This side the blue-room door,Is an old Bible, bound in leather, Standing upon the floor;'Go with this taper, bring it me; Carry it on your arm;It is the book on many a sea Hath stilled the waves' alarm.'Late the hour, dark the night, The house is solitary,Feeble is a taper's light To light poor Ann to see.Her eyes are yet with visions bright Of sylph and river, flower and fay,Now through a narrow corridor She takes her lonely way.Vast shadows on the heedless walls Gigantic loom, stoop low:Each little hasty footfall calls Hollowly to and fro.In the dim solitude her heart Remembers tearlesslyWhite winters when h...
Walter De La Mare
Laurana's Song. For "A Lady Of Venice."
Who'll have the crumpled pieces of a heart?Let him take mine!Who'll give his whole of passion for a part,And call't divine?Who'll have the soiled remainder of desire?Who'll warm his fingers at a burnt-out fire?Who'll drink the lees of love, and cast i' the mireThe nobler wine?Let him come here, and kiss me on the mouth,And have his will!Love dead and dry as summer in the SouthWhen winds are stillAnd all the leafage shrivels in the heat!Let him come here and linger at my feetTill he grow weary with the over-sweet,And die, or kill.
Bliss Carman
Song.
Once as the aureole Day left the earth, Faded, a twilight soul, Memory, had birth:Young were her sister souls, Sorrow and Mirth. Dark mirrors are her eyes: Wherein who gaze See wan effulgencies Flicker and blaze -Lorn fleeting shadows of beautiful days. Scan those deep mirrors well After long years: Lo! what aforetime fell In rain of tears,In radiant glamour-mist now reappears. See old wild gladness Tamed now and coy; Grief that was madness Turned into joy.Fate cannot harr...
Thomas Runciman
The Song Of The Young Page
All that I know of love I seeIn eyes that never look at me;All that I know of love I guessBut from another's happiness.A beggar at the window I,Who, famished, looks on revelry;A slave who lifts his torch to guideThe happy bridegroom to his bride.My granddam told me once of oneWhom all her village spat upon,Seeing the church from out its breastHad cast him cursed and unconfessed.An outcast he who dared not takeThe wafer that God's vicars break,But dull-eyed watched his neighbours passWith shining faces from the Mass.Oh thou, my brother, take my hand,More than one God hath blessed and bannedAnd hidden from man's anguished glanceThe glory of his countenance.All that I know of love I seeIn...
Theodosia Garrison
Sonnets - VI. - To......
"Miss not the occasion: by the forelock takeThat subtile Power, the never-halting Time,Lest a mere moment's putting-off should makeMischance almost as heavy as a crime.""Wait, prithee, wait!" this answer Lesbia threwForth to her Dove, and took no further heed;Her eye was busy, while her fingers flewAcross the harp, with soul-engrossing speed;But from that bondage when her thoughts were freedShe rose, and toward the close-shut casement drew,Whence the poor unregarded Favourite, trueTo old affections, had been heard to pleadWith flapping wing for entrance. What a shriek!Forced from that voice so lately tuned to a strainOf harmony! a shriek of terror, pain,And self-reproach! for, from aloft, a KitePounced, and the Dove, which fro...
William Wordsworth
Disdain Returned
He that loves a rosy cheek,Or a coral lip admires,Or from star-like eyes doth seekFuel to maintain his fires;As old Time makes these decay,So his flames must waste away.But a smooth and steadfast mind,Gentle thoughts and calm desires,Hearts with equal love combind,Kindle never-dying fires.Where these are not, I despiseLovely cheeks, or lips, or eyes.No tears, Celia, now shall winMy resolvd heart to return;I have searchd thy soul within,And find nought, but pride, and scorn;I have learnd thy arts, and nowCan disdain as much as thou.Some power, in my revenge, conveyThat love to her I cast away.
Thomas Carew
Love And A Question
A stranger came to the door at eve,And he spoke the bridegroom fair.He bore a green-white stick in his hand,And, for all burden, care.He asked with the eyes more than the lipsFor a shelter for the night,And he turned and looked at the road afarWithout a window light.The bridegroom came forth into the porchWith, 'Let us look at the sky,And question what of the night to be,Stranger, you and I.'The woodbine leaves littered the yard,The woodbine berries were blue,Autumn, yes, winter was in the wind;'Stranger, I wish I knew.'Within, the bride in the dusk aloneBent over the open fire,Her face rose-red with the glowing coalAnd the thought of the heart's desire.The bridegroom looked at the weary road,Yet ...
Robert Lee Frost
Consider
(Macmillan's Magazine, Jan. 1866.) ConsiderThe lilies of the field whose bloom is brief: - We are as they; Like them we fade away,As doth a leaf. ConsiderThe sparrows of the air of small account: Our God doth viewWhether they fall or mount, - He guards us too. ConsiderThe lilies that do neither spin nor toil, Yet are most fair: - What profits all this careAnd all this coil? ConsiderThe birds that have no barn nor harvest-weeks; God gives them food: -Much more our Father seeks To do us good.
Christina Georgina Rossetti
Fault Finders. (Prose)
If ther's ony sooart o' fowk aw hate, it's them at's allus lukkin' aght for faults; - hang it up! they get soa used to it, wol they willn't see ony beauties if they are thear. They remind me ov a chap 'at aw knew at wed a woman 'at had a wart at th' end ov her nooas, but it war nobbut a little en, an' shoo wor a varry bonny lass for all that; but when they'd been wed a bit, an' th' newness had getten warn off, he began to fancy at this wart grew bigger ivery day, an' he stared at it, an' studied abaght it, wol when he luk'd at his wife he could see nowt else, an' he kept dinging her up wi' it wol shoo felt varry mich troubled. But one day, as they wor gettin' ther dinner, he said, "Nay, lass, aw niver did see sich a thing as that wart o' thy nooas is growing into; if it gooas on tha'll be like a rhynockoroo or a newnicorn or summat!"
John Hartley
Margaret's Remembrance Of Lightfoot.
My beautiful steed,'Tis painful indeedTo think we are parted forever;That on no sunny day,With light spirits and gay,Over hills far away,We shall joyously travel together.Thy soft glossy maneI shall ne'er see again,Nor thy proudly arched neck 'gain behold;Nor admire that in thee,Which so seldom we see,A kind, gentle spirit, yet bold.Thou wert pleasant indeedMy darling grey steed,"In my mind's eye" thou'rt beautiful still;For when thou wert oldThy heart grew not cold,Its warm current time never could chill.Not a stone marks the spotWhere they laid thee, Lightfoot,And no fence to enclose thee around;But what if there's not,Deep engraved on my heartThy loved image may ever b...
Mary Ann H. T. Bigelow
The Beautiful Night.
Now I leave this cottage lowly,Where my love hath made her home,And with silent footstep slowlyThrough the darksome forest roam,Luna breaks through oaks and bushes,Zephyr hastes her steps to meet,And the waving birch-tree blushes,Scattering round her incense sweet.Grateful are the cooling breezesOf this beauteous summer night,Here is felt the charm that pleases,And that gives the soul delight.Boundless is my joy; yet, Heaven,Willingly I'd leave to theeThousand such nights, were one givenBy my maiden loved to me!
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe
Caroline Chisholm
A perfect woman, nobly planned,To warn, to comfort, and command.The priests and the Levites went forth, to feast at the courts of the Kings;They were vain of their greatness and worth, and gladdened with glittering things;They were fair in the favour of gold, and they walked on, with delicate feet,Where, famished and faint with the cold, the women fell down in the street.The Priests and the Levites looked round, all vexed and perplexed at the criesOf the maiden who crouched to the ground with the madness of want in her eyes;And they muttered Few praises are earned when good hath been wrought in the dark;While the backs of the people are turned, we choose not to loiter nor hark.Moreover they said It is fair that our deeds in the daylight should shine:...
Henry Kendall
Poem: Chanson
A ring of gold and a milk-white doveAre goodly gifts for thee,And a hempen rope for your own loveTo hang upon a tree.For you a House of Ivory,(Roses are white in the rose-bower)!A narrow bed for me to lie,(White, O white, is the hemlock flower)!Myrtle and jessamine for you,(O the red rose is fair to see)!For me the cypress and the rue,(Finest of all is rosemary)!For you three lovers of your hand,(Green grass where a man lies dead)!For me three paces on the sand,(Plant lilies at my head)!
Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde
A Portrait
Thoughtful in youth, but not austere in age;Calm, but not cold, and cheerful though a sage;Too true to flatter and too kind to sneer,And only just when seemingly severe;So gently blending courtesy and artThat wisdom's lips seemed borrowing friendship's heart.Taught by the sorrows that his age had knownIn others' trials to forget his own,As hour by hour his lengthened day declined,A sweeter radiance lingered o'er his mind.Cold were the lips that spoke his early praise,And hushed the voices of his morning days,Yet the same accents dwelt on every tongue,And love renewing kept him ever young.
Oliver Wendell Holmes
A Tragedy Of The 19th Century.
"Et potis es nigrum vitio praefigere Delta." - PERSIUS. It was a young Examiner, scarce thirty were his years, His name our University loves, honours, and reveres: He pondered o'er some papers, and a tear stood in his eye; He split his quill upon the desk, and raised a bitter cry - 'O why has Fortune struck me down with this unearthly blow? "Why doom'd me to examine in my lov'd one's Little-go? "O Love and Duty, sisters twain, in diverse ways ye pull; "I dare not 'pass,' I scarce can 'pluck:' my cup of woe is full. "O that I ever should have lived this dismal day to see"! He knit his brow, and nerved his hand, and wrote the fatal D. * * * * * *
Edward Woodley Bowling
The Jewish May
May has come from out the showers,Sun and splendor in her train.All the grasses and the flowersWaken up to life again.Once again the leaves do show,And the meadow blossoms blow,Once again through hills and dalesRise the songs of nightingales.Wheresoe'er on field or hillsideWith her paint-brush Spring is seen,--In the valley, by the rillside,All the earth is decked with green.Once again the sun beguilesMoves the drowsy world to smiles.See! the sun, with mother-kissWakes her child to joy and bliss.Now each human feeling pressesFlow'r like, upward to the sun,Softly, through the heart's recesses,Steal sweet fancies, one by one.Golden dreams, their wings outshaking,Now are makingRealms celestial,...
Morris Rosenfeld
The Diamond And The Pebble.
Why value ye the diamond, andThe pearl from Ceylon's balmy shore,When stones unnumber'd strew the land,And in the sea are millions more?Why treasure ye each silver bar,And watch, with Argus eye, your gold,When lead and iron, near and far,Are strewn beneath the rocks and mould.Ye prize those shining gems, becauseTheir sparkling beauty cheers the eye,And, by the force of nature's laws,They never in profusion lie.Could we, Aladdin like, descendInto a place where diamonds grow,Our minds would then most surely tendTo value diamonds very low.The emerald's or diamond's shine,Is valued not for that alone,But for its absence in the mine,Where thousands lie, of common stone.And thus, within the world of thought,T...
Thomas Frederick Young
My Jean!
Tune - "The Northern Lass." Though cruel fate should bid us part, Far as the pole and line, Her dear idea round my heart, Should tenderly entwine. Though mountains rise, and deserts howl, And oceans roar between; Yet, dearer than my deathless soul, I still would love my Jean
Robert Burns